Thursday, 26 February 2026

BY-ELECTIONS 26.02.26


It's by-election day in Gorton and Denton and this fascinating contest is going to keep plenty of Brits up into the early hours to see which way this tight election swings.

This is the second Westminster by-election in the current Parliament, the previous being Runcorn and Helsby.  That seat was also vacated by a Labour MP (Mike Amesbury) and it was one of the closest fought elections in history, with Reform taking the seat by just six votes.  Reform would take a similar result in Gorton and Denton, but this is a far more complex battleground.

Reform won't just be taking on Labour here, as the Green Party also pose a significant threat.  In fact, in recent weeks the Greens have overtaken Reform in both polling and betting markets.  However, the contest is reportedly so tight that the eventual winner is hard to predict.

First off, let's recap what happened in the general election.

Gorton and Denton, 2024 general election

Andrew Gwynne (Lab) 18,555 (50.8%) -16.4%
Lee Moffitt (Ref) 5,142 (14.1%) +9.2%
Amanda Gardner (Grn) 4,810 (13.2%) +10.7%
Amir Burney (WPB) 3,766 (10.3%) New
Ruth Welsh (Con) 2,888 (7.9%) -11.0%
John Reid (LDm) 1,399 (3.8%) -2.0%

As you can see, Labour will be defending a significant 13,413 majority.  This should be an easily defensible majority, but such is the meteoric collapse in Labour support since the general election, there is every chance they will finish third in this by-election.  For context, Labour were defending an even bigger majority in Runcorn and Helsby last May (14,696).  Crucially, Labour are less popular now than they were at that time.  Last May they were polling in a range of 20-26 per cent nationally, but they are now polling in a range of 16-22 per cent.

Labour's vote share in recent council by-elections has been routinely collapsing in double digits, with a figure around the 20 per cent mark representing a rough average.  However, every seat is different and they have obviously poured national resources into Gorton and Denton for weeks on end.  We would still expect Labour's share of the vote to plummet by at least 15 per cent, possibly up to 20 per cent.  That is what makes this a three-way contest as a collapse in support brings both Reform and the Greens into play.

Few people expect Labour to hold here and betting markets clearly reflect this.

Latest odds according to oddschecker.com

One cannot obviously read too much into betting markets per se, but they have proved time and again to be as reliable (or unreliable) as polling.

So, what do the polls say?

Two polls have been conducted recently, both of which favour the Greens.  An earlier poll conducted by Find Out Now favoured Reform, but this was taken way back in January before any candidates had been announced and it also had an absurd sample size of just 143 from a constituency with more than 74,000 voters.

Omnisis poll, 13-19 February

Grn = 33%
Ref = 29%
Lab = 26%
Oth = 12%

Opinium poll, 16-24 February

Lab/Grn = 28%
Ref = 27%
Oth = 16%

These are tight margins, in particular the Opinium poll which ties Labour and the Greens.  However, the Opinium poll has a caveat.  It asked an additional question on voting likelihood.  When this is considered, the result shifts towards the Greens.

Opinium poll, 16-24 February, those likely to vote

Grn 30%
Lab/Ref 28%
Oth = 15%

It is still extremely tight, but again we can't draw too much from these polls on their own.

Canvassing returns from both Reform and the Greens reportedly favour Reform, albeit marginally ahead of the Greens.  Labour has remain tight-lipped on its own canvass returns, which could suggest they are not exactly flattering for the party.  Labour has also gone to great lengths to ignore the Green Party in this by-election, painting it as a head-to-head battle in which only Reform can beat them.  This could also suggest that their own canvassing does not reflect this campaign message and shows that the Greens are indeed a major threat.

It was interesting to note that when Keir Starmer visited the constituency earlier this week, he did meet any members of the public.  Instead, he merely attended a private meeting of Labour activists.  It is not clear whose decision this was, but it was almost certainly to avoid any damaging interactions with the public.  Labour are toast here and they know it.  Nigel Farage has had no issues pounding the streets with Reform activists, likewise Zack Polanski.

Much has been made in recent days of the Green Party's overtures to the Muslim community.  It appears that they have fought so hard in this direction that it could actually backfire on them.  The Muslim population here stood at 29.6 per cent according to the 2021 census.  That could be enough to swing any tight by-election, but there is nothing to suggest that the Muslim community will abandon Labour in its entirety.  There were plenty of Muslim faces present at the Labour meeting attended by Keir Starmer earlier this week.  Furthermore, Labour has decades of experience fixing elections in these communities and they will have taken full advantage of the postal vote system, rendering the last week of Green campaigning meaningless with those postal votes already filled out en masse.

While Muslim voters could potentially swing the election in the Greens' favour, that community will clearly be split to some degree, while the majority of the constituency is neither Muslim or duty bound to vote for left-wing candidates.

That favours Reform.  While Labour and the Greens desperately fight it out for Muslim votes, Reform have got out and explored all the other demographics at play.  We know that white working classes largely tend to give Labour the cold shoulder these days, but turnout is notoriously low.  The white middle class demographic will also be crucial to Reform, but we know that this is the only native demographic that still entertains Labour and the left to any significant degree.  There is plenty of evidence from more affluent parts of the constituency that Reform has made headway.

While it would be easy to follow betting markets and the pollsters with their pathetic samples and dubious methods, we are looking at a major split in the left-wing vote as the deciding factor in the outcome.  Yes, this area has returned Labour MPs and councillors for the best part of a century, but the game has changed.  Labour is crumbling.  And yes, the Greens will benefit here, but so will Reform.

It is a myth that Reform's vote is made up purely of defecting Tory voters.  When one looks at the urban conurbations where Reform are winning seats, they can only do so by picking up defecting Labour voters too.  There are still native and minority voters who have spent generations voting Labour and know nothing else.  They are not always technically 'left-wing', do not necessarily share 'progressive' values and in some cases are not politically minded.  Times are changing, thanks in no small part to the rise of social media and alternative news.  This is why the establishment fears these things and is desperately looking to censor such outlets, particularly for youngsters.  Labour and the left have had decades in control and they have failed to achieve anything positive for the masses.

That's why, all things considered, we are going to call this by-election very narrowly for Reform.  This prediction is by no means delivered with any degree of confidence, but one of these three parties must triumph and whichever does so is unlikely to achieve it with a significant majority of anything more than a thousand votes.

We will bring you updates through the night and deliver the result here, on Facebook and X, no matter the time.

Council by-elections

There is also one council by-election taking place on Thursday, down on the south coast.  Shirley is the birthplace of Rishi Sunak, but there will be no Tory surprises here.  The result will almost certainly be a hold for the Lib Dems.

Shirley, Southampton City Council

(LDm defence)

Wednesday, 25 February 2026

THE GREEN TROJAN HORSE


The Green Party has been heavily pushed by legacy media in recent months, so far with little to show for the effort.  Each Thursday their electoral returns in council by-elections have not lived up to the 'Green surge' we are being sold.  Their share of the vote remains fairly flat, in fact it's quite often down, and that's in the few seats that the party bothers to contest.  Then out of nowhere came an impressive victory in Leicester last Thursday.

The last time voters went to the polls in Stoneygate ward, the Greens finished last, behind Labour, the Tories, independents and Lib Dems.  That was three years ago.  Last week they bested all comers, including Reform, and did indeed 'surge' to first place.  What made Stoneygate special, so different?

The list of names on the ballot paper should provide a clue.  From a field of eight candidates, six were of south Asian descent.  The last census showed Stoneygate with a 63 per cent Muslim majority.  The Greens' success here was built on sectarian politics, something they hope to exploit again in Gorton and Denton this Thursday.

While the Muslim population of the Manchester constituency stood at less than 30 per cent in the same census, if we know anything about that community at all it is their ability to put a cross on a ballot paper.  'Even dead Muslims vote' is a common phrase on the campaign trail in such Balkanised towns, a reference to decades of fraudulent voting patterns.  This is why the left are always opposed to voter ID, despite being largely in favour of every other type of ID.

While Muslim settlers have flirted with other parties in the past, it has generally been sporadic and short-lived.  George Galloway has tried to exploit the Muslim vote with multiple parties and got himself back on the Westminster gravy train twice - first through Respect and later the Workers Party of Britain.  Now the Greens are getting in on the act, appealing to Islamist discontent with Labour's perceived failure to support the Palestinian cause.

In Gorton and Denton they have cynically targeted such grievances.  One leaflet features candidate Hannah Spencer stood in front of a local mosque and 'STOP ISLAMOPHOBIA' written in bold letters.  The reverse side of the leaflet contains a series of punchy slogans written only in Urdu.  The national language of Pakistan has also been used in a social media video promoting the Greens, albeit you'll be hard pushed to find any references to their progressive liberal policies.  The video plays to a victimhood mentality in the community, showing images of Home Office detentions, ICE detentions (in the US), the summer riots of 2024, references to 'Islamophobia' and demonising Labour over Gaza and Reform over 'racism'.

The video is discussed by Richey in the following YouTube video (five minute watch).


Whether the Greens have successfully persuaded enough Muslims to swing the vote in their favour will be revealed in the early hours of Friday.  They remain odds on favourites across betting markets and lead Reform by four points in one poll, while they are in a dead heat with Labour in another.

The Balkanisation of our country, in particular the towns and cities where more than half of our parliamentary constituencies reside, does not bode well for a cohesive democracy.  Diversity is not strength, no matter how many times the left-leaning establishment bang that propaganda drum.  A victory for the Greens in Gorton and Denton will not serve the establishment, it will provide a spring board for an Islamist trojan horse that will ultimately sweep away our democracy, and along with it all those progressive values that the Green Party and other hard left parties dote on.

Tuesday, 24 February 2026

TOON TUESDAY #92

This week we have the Labour Together scandal, references to the late conservative actor Robert Duvall, lots of u-turns and an intervention by President Trump on the Chagos surrender.  Then, finally we return to Peter Mandelson (again)!

Morten Morland for The Times
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Graeme Bandeira for The Northern Agenda
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Ella Baron for The Guardian
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Nick Newman for The Sunday Times
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Sunday Times
Andy Bunday on Instagram

Monday, 23 February 2026

MEME MONDAY #71

Now that he has u-turned again - this time on the cancelled local elections - Starmer is beginging to hit the campaign trail for what is going to be a monumental disaster in May.  Those results could be the end of him, unless he is already gone thanks to defeat in Gorton and Denton this Thursday.

Mon 16 Feb - 44 shares
Tue 17 Feb - 64 shares
Wed 18 Feb - 98 shares
Wed 18 Feb - 49 shares
Thu 19 Feb - 28 shares.  Just look at the faces on these factory workers in
south Wales.  Talk about losing the will to live!
Thu 19 Feb - 124 shares
Thu 19 Feb - 15 shares
Thu 19 Feb - 143 shares.  Another bold move by President Trump and
one that is sure to make our robotic tyrant PM wince
Fri 20 Feb - 994 shares
Fri 20 Feb - 6 shares
Sun 22 Feb - 121 shares
Sun 22 Feb - 8 shares

Karl was also busy with his Facebook Stories last week, putting out a record half dozen, including three more editions of 'Diversity is Strength'.  To be fair, with the ever growing colonisation and Balkanisation of our nation, this series could run seven days a week and then some...




Want to support us?  You can buy us a metaphorical pint each here - it may not seem much, but it helps us pay for things like our web domain, software, ads and a very pricy X subscription!

Thank you.

Sunday, 22 February 2026

BOATWATCH #47

Boat crossings normally increase as winter begins to peter out, but last week Home Office-sponsored taxis collected zero migrants according to official data.  Spring is on its way, the lull won't last long...

Saturday, 21 February 2026

LITTLE OWEN LANDS

Everyone's favourite little lefty gobshite has landed in Gorton and Denton for the big by-election.  The Guardian's Owen Jones has shifted his allegiance yet again recently, this time to the Greens, who have overtaken Reform to be the favourites to take the seat on Thursday.

In between campaigning for the open borders lunatics, he has been making videos for his social media followers.  Two days ago he posted a 25 minute video that mostly consisted of vox pop type interviews he'd made with constituents in the street.  He singled one such segment for a post on his social media channels that smacked of the condescending attitude we have come to associate with legacy media hacks.

Despite a plethora of intriguing responses and a variety of endorsements for the three main contenders in Gorton and Denton, the wee man honed in on a short exchange with one particular voter.

Watch below, with Richey's commentary.


Kudos to this lady, she came off eminently better in this clip than little Owen, who doesn't appreciate that small gestures matter a lot to ordinary people.  Manners and etiquette are still important to some folk in the godless debauched anything-goes society promoted by leftists like Jones.  The great irony is that the working classes will be the downfall of an ideology that was founded in their name.  Bourgeois twats like Jones will never comprehend that, as they exist purely in a middle class echo chamber that regards the proletariat with the same kind of disdain they would show towards a piece of dog shit they have stepped in.

The people are rising little man, and regardless of the result in Gorton and Denton they will not swing left.

Thursday, 19 February 2026

COUNCIL BY-ELECTIONS 19.02.26


It was a trio of Labour defences on Thursday, with one week to go before the big day in Gorton and Denton.  After accurately predicting last week's results, we got two out of three correct yesterday.

Plaid and Reform pushed Labour into third place in Caerphilly, while they fell to the Lib Dems in Cleveland.  Technically, the latter seat was vacated by an independent, as the incumbent quit Labour last October.

The result we didn't see coming was a gain for the Greens in Leicester, which may be symptomatic of a shift away from Labour in certain ethno-religious communities.  Stoneygate ward was 63 per cent Muslim according to the 2021 census.

It is probably for similar reasons that the smart money is going on the Greens to win in Gorton and Denton next week.  The Muslim population in the constituency stood at almost 30 per cent in 2021 and in a tight three way contest, this could be enough for the Greens to edge it if there is a big swing from Labour in that demographic.  This time next week we will know, but any predictions made will have been reached with very little degree of confidence.  Gorton and Denton has become notoriously difficult to call...

Van, Caerphilly County Borough Council

Pld: 374 (43.3%) -1.9%
Ref: 246 (28.5%) New
Lab: 231 (26.8%) -28.0%
LDm: 12 (1.4%) New

Pld GAIN from Lab

Stoneygate, Leicester City Council

Grn: 1,195 (30.4%) +22.9%
Lab: 1,089 (27.7%) -12.8%
Ind: 638 (16.2%) New
Ind: 453 (11.5%) New
Con: 327 (8.3%) -15.3%
Ref: 106 (2.7%) New
LDm: 62 (1.6%) -5.9%
Ind: 61 (1.6%) New

Grn GAIN from Lab

Zetland, Redcar and Cleveland Borough Council

LDm: 446 (50.5%) +15.2%
Lab: 191 (21.6%) -25.2%
Ref: 119 (13.5%) New
Grn: 65 (7.4%) New
Con: 62 (7.0%) -10.9%

LDm GAIN from Lab

LUCY'S LOUSY LETTER

While the smart money appears to have gone on the Greens sneaking victory in Gorton and Denton, the Labour machine - including third party smear groups like Hope Not Hate - have focused squarely on Reform UK and their candidate.  Labour are clearly more concerned with losing the seat to a right-leaning party than a crazed bunch of leftists, so much so that Lucy Powell has taken time out of the campaign to write a public letter to Reform's Matt Goodwin.

In an attempt to smear Goodwin, Labour's deputy leader and MP for Manchester Central has listed some apparently 'damning revelations' about his campaign team from a recent article by local rag the Manchester Mill.  She goes on to challenge Goodwin to publicly denounce the named individuals, who are alleged to have committed such heinous 'crimes' as using discriminatory language towards Muslims and sharing 'conspiracy theories' about the September 11th attacks and referring to Donald Trump - an Israeli puppet president - as an Israeli puppet president!

The letter can be seen below.



Imagine taking time out from actual campaigning to pull this mindless stunt?  She and her team could have been knocking doors or leafleting, but no.  All Labour have left in Gorton and Denton is name calling and smears.  The best thing Matt Goodwin can do in response to her letter is precisely nothing.  Throw it in the bin where it belongs and continue pounding the streets which is where the election will be won.

There's one week left, let Labour morons waste time throwing their silly labels around.  They don't stick like they used to.

Tuesday, 17 February 2026

TOON TUESDAY #91

A tough week for Chairman Starmer, but he's survived - for now.  Potential challengers are sharpening their knives ready to strike when the next scandal or electoral defeat rocks up.  The behind-the-scenes shenanigans was brilliantly illustrated by cartoonists from left and right last week, including a welcome return for Peter Brookes' portrayal of Ed Miliband as Wallace.  Please note that Morten Morland of The Times beat The Telegraph's Christian Adams to the 'Withering Heights' concept by a full week...

Andy Davey for The Daily Telegraph
Christian Adams for The Daily Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Times
Christian Adams for The Sunday Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Sunday Times
Ben Jennings for The Guardian
Ben Jennings for The Guardian
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Morten Morland for The Times
Andy Bunday on Instagram
Patrick Blower for The Daily Telegraph
Ella Baron for The Guardian
Morten Morland for The Times
Matt Pritchett for The Sunday Telegraph
Ben Jennings for The Guardian
Morten Morland for The Sunday Times
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph
Peter Brookes for The Times
Matt Pritchett for The Daily Telegraph